Alice Oswald's Weather Anthology, What a Carve Up!, Memoir writing

Published: Nov. 4, 2020, 8:06 p.m.

We can't go to the movies for a fix of action now. We can, though, witness spectacle that even the biggest budget blockbusters can't match - by simply going outside into the weather. 'Use should be made of it,' wrote Virginia Woolf. 'One should not let this gigantic cinema play perpetually to an empty house.' The poet Alice Oswald discusses Gigantic Cinema: A Weather Anthology that she's compiled with editor Paul Keegan, capturing writing about the weather, from the deluge in Gilgamesh, the earliest known poem, to 'Billie's Rain' one written a few years ago, about sitting in a van listening as rain hammers on the roof.

Missing the stage? Don\u2019t despair - three regional theatres just got together to stage a lockdown-proof digital production of Jonathan Coe\u2019s classic 1994 satirical novel What A Carve Up! They\u2019ve re-imagined it for 2020, and added an all-star cast from Tamzin Outhwaite to Sharon D Clark, with cameos from Stephen Fry and Derek Jacobi. Katie Popperwell reviews.

In recent years, the growing popularity of Life Writing - creative writing based on autobiography or memoir - can be seen across book awards shortlists as well as the sheer number of creative writing courses dedicated to the subject. As the annual Spread the Word Life Writing Prize opens for entries, we talk to judge Frances Wilson about the kind of work the prize is seeking as well as the latest developments in this type of writing. She\u2019ll be joined by Poet and teacher Anthony Anaxagorou, whose book How to Write It - published this month by Stormzy\u2019s publishing imprint, Merky Books - aims to encourage budding writers to tell their story.

Presenter Ben Bailey Smith\nProducer Jerome Weatherald